In reviewing the materials that were saved by my Father and Mother over the years since his roughly 1-1/2 years with Louis Armstrong’s All-Stars, I’ve chosen these items to post as the first of several blogs that I’ll be generating about my Dad’s career with Louis and others. I hope Armstrong fans and jazz history buffs will find them as interesting as I do.
Regards,
Russ
Here’s an ad from the Tuesday August 23, 1952 New York World Telegram and Sun that promotes the All-Stars Paramount Theater engagement beginning on the following day, Wednesday. Everyone on the band and on the show’s bill is listed.
The top half of this ad featured a promo for “The Crimson Pirate” starring Burt Lancaster.
The Paramount engagement was important enough for my Dad to save a lot of materials relating to that time. Here are photos of everyone on the bill and more. Sorry, nothing from Burt Lancaster.
This shot shows the entire band. Left to right – My Father, Russ Phillips, Marty Napoleon, piano, Louis Armstrong, Cozy Cole, drums, Bob McCracken, filling in for Barney Bigard on clarinet and Arvell Shaw, bass.
I can only guess that the other musicians and performers on stage with the All-Stars were members of Gordon Jenkins’ Orchestra.
A closer view of my Dad and Louis with Marty Napoleon obviously having a good time! Please excuse the reflections as this is one of several photos in archival frames on our walls.
Velma with Pop and Pops! Dad loved his time with the All-Stars and always spoke highly of everyone, but he was especially fond of Velma. I should add here, that while my Dad was a member of the band, my Mother and I almost always accompanied him. No doubt I was backstage during these performances at the Paramount. All the band members, Louis included, couldn’t have been nicer.
Carl Balentine or Mr. Balentine had a very funny magic act. I ended up playing his act in an industrial show here in Chicago about 35 years later!
Walter Long was a dancer. I’ve found him listed in the casts of several movies of the period, notably from this Chicagoan’s point of view, “Wabash Avenue” which featured Betty Grable, Victor Mature and Phil Harris.
My Father often spoke of spending a great deal of time with Gordon Jenkins, the great arranger and composer during this engagement. So much so, Jenkins gave him a poem he wrote about the time spent at the Paramount and with the All-Stars.
All day we beat our brains out,
with the Gordon Jenkins band.
And though it snows or rains out,
we have to be on hand.
We give our all and more so,
for scale and a few kind words,
this Paramount type of floor show
is strictly for the birds –
And so it’s not surprising
that we wander in a daze,
but we find our sprits rising
when Mr. Armstrong plays.
The magician’s efforts bore us,
he ceases to amaze,
but it’s really Christmas for us
when Mr. Armstrong plays.
The dancer fails to grip us,
our collective asses drag,
but the All-Stars really flip us
when they play the “Twelfth St. Rag”.
Tho the smiles have left our faces,
and the shine is off our shoes,
we’re all off to the races
when Velma sings the blues
Far beyond the rainbow
and way above a star
there’s a place for Louis Armstrong
where the giants of music are.
When the angels finally find him,
leave us buy a fifth of gin
and all line up behind him
when the Saints go Marching in.
G. Jenkins